The documentary "Sir!
No Sir!" recalls how some Vietnam GIs opposed the war.
By Kenneth Turan,
Los Angeles Times, 5 May 2006
"Sir! No Sir!" is a powerful documentary that uncovers half-forgotten
history, history that is still relevant but not in ways you might be
expecting.
Written and directed by David Zeiger, "Sir! No Sir!" brings back to
public consciousness the nervy and surprisingly pervasive GI antiwar
movement that flourished during the Vietnam War, a movement that was
more widespread than anyone wants to remember today.
Winner of the documentary audience award at the Los Angeles Independent
Film Festival and a Spirit Award nominee, "Sir! No Sir!" doesn't mention
the current war in Iraq, or for that matter, John Kerry, who was a
prominent antiwar soldier. But then and now comparisons are inevitable.
Though not a veteran, director Zeiger was an organizer in that movement,
and he has sought out and interviewed an exceptional group of idealistic
men and women, articulate and strong-minded individuals who had the
courage to act on their beliefs.
Without having to say it, "Sir! No Sir!" underscores what an engaged,
activist group the people of the 1960s were. Even those who were
conventional and patriotic enough to enlist in the armed services were
so a part of that rambunctious generation that they could not stand
still when they felt wrongs were being committed.
That spirit is noticeably lacking today, both inside and outside the
military, where atrocities like Abu Ghraib didn't call forth anything
like the reaction that the My Lai massacre did in its day.
The first armed services members to speak out were inevitably true
believers, people who had bought the myth of what we were supposedly
doing in Vietnam and took it especially hard when the reality kicked in.
Most notable of these was Donald Duncan, a decorated Green Beret who
left the military in 1966, after more than a year in Vietnam, so early
there was "no movement to join." Duncan loved being a Green Beret but
came to feel that "the problem I had was realizing that what I was doing
was not good. I was doing it right, but I wasn't doing right."
From Duncan on, the antiwar soldiers could not make their peace with the
cynical use of torture and the elimination of women, children and
civilians in accordance with what one of them called a "kill them all,
sort it out later" philosophy. Louis Font, who felt Vietnam was a war of
aggression, became the first West Point graduate in history to refuse
war service, and Dave Cline, wondering why a man he just killed was dead
while Cline was alive, came to feel that continued silence was "part of
keeping the lie going."
The soldiers' antiwar movement soon spawned off-base coffeehouses in
military towns, such as the Oleo Strut outside Ft. Hood, Texas, as well
as underground newspapers that soon numbered more than 200. It also
spawned a cabaret tour called the FTA Show (for Free the Army or
something more profane), a kind of anti-Bob Hope tour that starred Jane
Fonda, whose son, actor Troy Garity, is this film's narrator.
As "Sir! No Sir!" points out, the sheer statistics of soldier resistance
are impressive. The Pentagon reported 503,926 "incidents of desertion"
between 1966 and 1971, 1,400 active duty soldiers signed a New York
Times antiwar ad, and incidents of fragging, the intentional shooting of
officers, became noticeable. All of this culminated in the Winter
Soldier Investigation hearings and the sight of veterans throwing their
medals onto the steps of the Capitol.
One of "Sir! No Sir!'s" most interesting points is how the vital
partnership between the peace movement and disgruntled soldiers has
fallen from view, replaced in the popular imagination with the notion of
peaceniks spitting on Vietnam veterans, something that sociologist Jerry
Lembcke, author of "The Spitting Image," says likely never happened.
Despite his longtime interest, filmmaker Zeiger despaired of ever
getting this story on film, until the post-Sept. 11 world made the
conduct of American soldiers during wartime suddenly a hot topic. We may
never recapture the spirit of the 1960s, but watching "Sir! No Sir!"
should get us away from the idea that opposing a war means any
disrespect to the troops. It wasn't that way in Vietnam, and it's not
that way now.
WEBSITE: 'Sir! No Sir!'
MPAA rating:
Unrated
Distributed by Displaced Films
and Balcony Releasing. Director David Zeiger. Producers Zeiger,
Evangeline Griego, Aaron Zarrow. Screenplay Zeiger. Director of
photography May Rigler, Zeiger. Editors Rigler, Lindsay Mofford. Running
time: 1 hour, 24 minutes.